... hearers will have a right to infer that certain important steps have been tacitly passed over ; and the speaker may feel sure that if such omissions are detected by any of his hearers, they will form an unfavorable opinion, because of ...
... hearers, who temporarily, until you prove incompetent, look to you for leadership. Every advantage is with you, including sympathetic attention. This should give you confidence. You have every opportunity in the world to succeed. If you ...
... hearers are the equals or the seniors of the speaker, so that they may properly assume a critical attitude, and reasonably desire to form their own estimate as to the validity of the conclusion announced ; for in this case they must ...
... hearers, the Archbishop of Mechlin declares. These lectures could not have announced the heliocentric theory, which dates from the year 1506 only, nor could they have been before the university, because Copernicus did not take the ...
... hearers. Names that are generally known, such as Apennines, Nile, Titicaca, may of course be used without introduction, as guides to smaller features in their neighborhood; but it would be a mistake to say that near Brisighella the ...
... hearers as well as to himself that, however much he may delve in the past, his object in doing so is solely in order better to understand the present. In contrast with the inductive and other methods of presentation, the chief ...
... hearers ; it is for the facts themselves to advocate the acceptance of whatever hypothesis best accounts for them; it is for the consequences that successfully confront the facts to urge the acceptance of the hypothesis from which they ...
... hearers will acquire both the thing and the term in their proper relation. If the term is introduced first, the hearers are placed in the dangerous position of trying to attach a concept to a name, instead of being led to the much safer ...
... hearers will have grasped the essential features of the district about Eome. Then a second and fuller statement of the same facts may be begun, from which the hearers may learn that the limestones of the Sabine mountains seem to be of ...